STEVEN ROSS JOHNSON February 22, 2020 01:00 AM
The years following implementation of the
Affordable Care Act have been a time of uncertainty for many city public
hospital systems.
While the health law has reduced
uncompensated-care costs for many providers and increased their volume of
insured patients, public safety net health systems have largely not reaped many
of the benefits of the healthcare law.
The growing financial challenges facing
municipal hospitals have led to a series of closures in cities throughout the country
over the past decade.
Decreases in federal and state support that were
designed to offset the cost of caring for low-income patients have forced some
of the largest public safety-net systems to cut services and personnel to
survive.
Yet for some, those moves will not be enough, a
point not lost on the head of the country’s largest public health system, which
is itself working to get its financial footing.
“Philadelphia has a lot of low-income people,
and they once had a public hospital but no more,” said Dr. Mitchell Katz, CEO of
NYC Health + Hospitals. “Washington, D.C., Milwaukee and Sacramento (Calif.)
all had a public hospital, but no more.”
It’s not just big cities that are losing their
public hospitals. The number of state and local government-owned community
hospitals has fallen 17% to 965 in 2018 from 1,163 in 2000, according to the
American Hospital Association. By contrast, the number of investor-owned
community hospitals increased by 73% over the same period.
NYC Health + Hospitals itself has faced years of
rising costs and declining revenue due to low rates of insurance reimbursement,
decreasing inpatient visits, and federal funding cuts.
Armed with an infusion of $1.1 billion in tax
levy funds in 2016, the NYC system is aiming to take the lead in how public
health systems should provide care by transforming its operations, following a
different route than is typical.
NYC Health + Hospitals’ approach has largely
focused on expanding primary-care access throughout more parts of the city,
streamlining administrative expenses, and improving its billing practices to
try to get higher reimbursement rates from insurers, instead of cutting back on
services.
“The reason to grow is because you believe that
you have something important to offer,” Katz said. “We’re growing because the
system has something unique and special to offer people, and when we present
what we have in a meaningful way, patients come.”
Still, the financial impact from the health
system’s transformation has been muted so far. Net patient revenue as listed in
its cost reports fell 0.7% to $5.45 billion in 2018 relative to 2016’s total of
$5.49 billion, according to the system.
And NYC Health + Hospitals is still losing
millions on patient care, but less than it was, according to Modern
Healthcare Metrics data and budget figures reported to the system’s board.
Net income from services to patients, which is
net patient revenue minus total operating expenses, fell to -$1.2 billion in
2018 from -$1 billion in 2016, a calculation that system officials said they
don’t believe carries much weight because it includes irrelevant figures. The
figures are derived from Medicare cost reports.
NYC Health + Hospitals’ own reporting to its
board showed that from 2016 to 2018 operating revenue rose 11.5% to $8.7
billion, while operating expenses climbed more slowly at 8% to $9.9 billion.
The resulting $1.2 billion operating loss in 2018 was 11.5% lower than it was
in 2016.
According to a statement from the health system,
the numbers reflect several major revenue reforms that began in fiscal 2017 and
2018 that affected patient revenue by the end of fiscal 2018; those efforts
have continued to grow in fiscal 2019 and 2020.
Critics argue the plan has not been ambitious
enough toward achieving the system’s outlined goals of raising revenue by
growing its volume of insured patients, or in cutting costs. They say while the
effort so far has shown promise, much of the transformation strategy’s
success—and the viability of the system more broadly—hinges on the municipal
and state funding it receives to make up budget shortfalls. New York City Mayor
Bill de Blasio recently warned state Medicaid cuts could reach up to $2 billion
for New York City, further increasing the need for support.
“They’re moving in the right direction and the
things they want to do are basically the right things on most of this,” said
Charles Brecher, senior adviser for health policy for the Citizens Budget
Commission, a not-for-profit, nonpartisan watchdog organization that advocates
for good financial governance in New York City and New York state government.
“It’s just that it’s going to be very hard because a lot of it depends on state
actions.”
Efforts so far
The effort to transform the financial state of
NYC Health + Hospitals began in 2016. At that time, de Blasio introduced
a turnaround plan that aimed to substantially expand
access to healthcare services and develop efficiencies to improve care quality
and lower costs. Top goals of the plan included cutting expenses by $700
million and adding $1.1 billion of new revenue by fiscal 2020.
Investments in the health system’s new
electronic health record system, as well as increases related to collective
bargaining agreements and the rise in employee benefits costs have contributed
to a 9% rise in total operating expenses from $6.06 billion in 2015 to $6.64
billion in 2018, according to Modern Healthcare Metrics. Health + Hospitals
officials contend that efforts over the past several years to reduce staffing
levels and maximize efficiencies within its supply chain have significantly
reduced spending from predicted levels.
Katz partly attributes progress made thus far to
the health system’s focus on cutting administrative costs. Last January,
officials announced plans to consolidate six administrative locations into one
new building; at the time the system claimed that would cut its real estate
rental costs by a total of $16.5 million over five years.
The health system in January made several key
changes to its senior executive leadership. NYC Health + Hospitals Queens
Hospital Center CEO Christopher Roker was named CEO of the system’s
Metropolitan Hospital in Manhattan as well as the system’s chief growth
officer, while Elmhurst Hospital CEO Israel Rocha replaced Roker as CEO of Queens
Hospital Center.
The system also added more than 600 nurses and
nursing support staff over the past year.
Revenue cycling harder
In terms of generating more revenue, Katz
acknowledged that Health + Hospitals has traditionally failed to make billing
insurers a high priority, which has led to the system in the past having lower
reimbursement rates among its commercially insured patients compared with other
hospital networks.
“We are very proud of the fact that Health +
Hospitals has always taken care of people regardless of their ability to pay,”
Katz said. “Unfortunately, what that translated to is that we sometimes don’t
bill their insurance even if they have it, or we don’t enroll them into
insurance even if they’re eligible, and that was a major mistake.”
An analysis released in December by the Citizens Budget Commission found the health system
recovered a smaller share of its costs for services from payers compared with
other city safety net providers and large teaching hospitals.
The report found Health + Hospitals recovered
just 42% of its associated costs from commercial insurers compared with 167%
among large academic medical centers and 77% among other safety-net
institutions. In terms of Medicaid, the system collected an estimated 53% of
its costs compared to 77% among safety-net providers.
The commission’s Brecher said the challenges
Health + Hospitals has had in billing commercial insurance have contributed to
its increasing budget shortfalls, which have been supplemented with city and
state funding.
“If you have a big profit margin on commercial
insurance and few Medicaid patients, you do well in this system,” Brecher said.
“If you’re Health + Hospitals and you’re not getting even 100% from commercial
insurance and you have a lot of Medicaid patients, it’s not working for you.”
The health system has sought to increase revenue
by growing the volume of insured patients and improving its billing practices
to get higher reimbursement rates and contract terms from payers, Katz said.
Building access and enrollment
Last August, the city launched the NYC Care
program, a $100 million-a-year initiative to expand healthcare access to the
estimated 600,000 uninsured residents.
One part of the program focuses on enrolling
those without insurance to Health + Hospitals’ public insurance option,
MetroPlus. NYC Care also promotes providing direct access to Health + Hospitals
facilities for primary-care services to an estimated 300,000 residents who
cannot afford coverage or are ineligible to enroll because of their
undocumented-resident status. The program is intended to reduce the need for
residents to visit hospital emergency departments for primary-care services.
“Not being adequately compensated for the amount
of charity care we give throughout the years has led to a huge deficit,” said
Dr. Ram Raju, former CEO of NYC Health + Hospitals and currently community
health investment officer for Northwell Health.
In terms of billing, the system expanded the
size of the department handling its revenue cycle with the addition of 390
positions over the last couple of years. Staff members were added to billing,
documentation and coding departments, while more personnel have been tasked
with negotiating reimbursement rates with managed-care plans.
Matthew Siegler, senior vice president for
managed care at Health + Hospitals, said new systemwide policies require staff
to check all uninsured patients’ eligibility for enrollment in a health plan
offered on the state’s insurance exchange and to help them get coverage. He
credited the practice with a 20% annual increase in insurance applications for
the last two years.
“We took a much harder line as we negotiated
with many of those plans,” Siegler said. “We told them we’re not trying to get
the highest rates of any hospital in the city, but that they needed to step up
and pay what’s fair.”
Katz said such efforts helped the health system
collect $260 million in patient revenue in the past year through billing
insurance, allowing the system to hit total patient revenue of $3.86 billion,
$30 million higher than fiscal 2018.
Those efforts have led to significant rate
increases and improved terms from many of the public system’s payers, according
to Siegler. Billing cycle improvements helped generate $216 million in fiscal
year 2019, up from $150 million the previous year, according to the health
system’s fiscal 2019 year end financial results released last October.
Siegler in January took on the added role of CEO
of OneCity Health, the performing provider system formed under New York state’s
Delivery System Reform Incentive Payment program; that program provides funding
for hospitals to change how they provide care to Medicaid beneficiaries and
requires them to meet certain performance metrics.
Siegler said he expected further improvement to
the revenue cycle as Health + Hospitals completed transitioning all of its
clinic sites to a new, single EHR and financial system last December. “The move
would greatly improve the public hospital system’s ability to document, code
and bill insurance companies,” he said.
Health + Hospitals, with its 11 acute-care
hospitals, five post-acute care facilities and 70 community health clinics,
retains a large share of New York City’s patient market—providing nearly half
of all city clinic visits annually.
But the health system has seen a continued
decline in patients, falling by 2% in fiscal 2019 compared with the previous
fiscal year and by more than 7% compared with fiscal 2015, according to figures
from the city’s 2019 Mayor’s Management Report.
Brecher felt the changes that Health + Hospitals
has been making to become more efficient, improve its billing cycle and attract
more insured patients were positive steps. But the strategy was not without
risk. He said the plan relies in part on the health system’s ability to attract
more commercially insured visitors as inpatients despite recent trends that
have shown the overall patient pool is shrinking.
Nationally, the number of inpatient stays
decreased by more than 6% between 2005 and 2014, according to a 2017 analysis
by the Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality, with
hospitalizations among patients with private insurance seeing the sharpest
decline, more than 18% over that period.
“He’s bucking a pretty strong tide,” Brecher
said of Katz and the turnaround plan. “More power to him if he can do it, but
it’s very hard in a shrinking market to increase your market share when the
perception is for many people, you’re not the first-choice provider.”
A balanced approach
Katz acknowledged that Health + Hospitals’
traditional business model made it difficult to generate much insurance revenue
from its inpatients because, much of the time, the system outsourced many of
the cases that could generate the highest reimbursements to other hospital
systems.
He said the transformation strategy has called
for providing more specialized services, such as emergency care and complicated
surgical procedures.
“The history of Health + Hospitals was that if
someone else would provide that service we would send those patients out of
Health + Hospitals,” Katz said. “We had a not very good business model where we
keep all of the things that paid poorly, and we would send out all of the
things that paid well—you keep a system viable by doing both.”
Katz said there was no reason why the health
system could not provide more higher-paying services while expanding its role
as the city’s largest primary-care provider. Annually it provides up to 60% of
all mental health services performed in New York City.
Better coordination
Dr. Machelle Allen, Health + Hospitals’ senior
vice president and chief medical officer, said increased coordination through
its new EHR system has allowed the health system to regionalize some of its
services to avoid having the same procedures offered at all 11 hospitals,
helping better use resources.
In September, Health + Hospitals’ Bellevue
Hospital received provisional designation as a Level II pediatric trauma site,
allowing the facility to treat up to 100 patients a year who would have been
traditionally transferred to other centers.
“The willingness to invest in the subspecialties
to support those patients who actually require further care than just primary
care takes a commitment,” Allen said. “Each of our hospitals has something to
offer their community.”
Dr. David Chokshi, vice president and chief
population health officer at Health + Hospitals, felt the system’s focus on
increasing its subspecialty offerings was fundamentally connected to its
overall push to become even more primary-care centric.
“We are entering into a new era of healthcare
financing related to value-based payment, and that makes it more important for
primary care to be at the center of healthcare delivery,” Chokshi said.
Last year NYC Health + Hospitals launched its
community care division, which includes the system’s first home-based
primary-care delivery program with a team made up of doctors, nurse
practitioners, social workers and community health workers who visit homebound
patients.
Chokshi said he viewed Health + Hospitals’ role
as offering an underserved patient a medical home in an environment where
individuals have no shortage of options but might feel intimidated seeking care
elsewhere.
“They know they can interact with staff who look
like them, who come from the same communities that they do,” Chokshi said. “I
think that is what is part of the DNA of our system.”
But some question whether Health + Hospitals’
strategy of expanding its role as the city’s safety net provider may run
counter to its effort to become more competitive with the top academic medical
centers for insured patients. “If you look at the numbers, that’s where you
lose the most money, you lose it on outpatient care to poor people,” the
Citizens Budget Commission’s Brecher said. “Doing more of it is a socially good
thing, but I don’t think it’s going to help your balance sheet.”
Others contend Katz’s approach has succeeded at
other municipal health systems.
As director of the Los Angeles County Health
Agency, Katz is credited for turning around the financial fortunes of a
struggling public system by converting a $170 million deficit in 2010 into a
$270 million budget surplus by 2015 by increasing revenue and cutting
administrative costs.
Dr. Hal Yee, chief medical officer at the Los
Angeles County Department of Health Services, said Katz’s ability to attract
the right people and to quickly build relationships with board supervisors and
the media allowed the health system to make the changes needed without
attracting undue scrutiny.
“By keeping all of the stupid things that get in
the way of good healthcare off of our backs, we were able to do our work and
put in place disruptions and innovations,” Yee said. “All of the things
necessary to execute in healthcare he allowed us to do that.”
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